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From Protests To The Polls: North Texas Activists Mobilize For Fall Election

Three canvassers standing outside a grocery store holding voter registration forms.
Bret Jaspers
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四虎影院
(From the left) Yadira Avitia, Kwame Osei Jr., and Ryan Winters of Enough is Enough Fort Worth.

Converting the energy of this summer's protests into lasting change requires delving into politics.

On a cloudy Thursday, as shoppers bustled in and out of an El Rancho grocery store in Fort Worth, a half dozen activists stood at the entrances, offering voter registration forms.

Yadira Avitia signed up one person that evening.

鈥淪he said she hasn鈥檛 been registered for a while and we just helped her fill out the application,鈥 Avitia said.

Avitia is a , which means she鈥檚 legally allowed to help register people in Tarrant County. Her colleague Dequan Johnson worked the other entrance, asking people if they鈥檙e registered.

He said he does the same thing at protests.

Dequan Johnson.
Bret Jaspers
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四虎影院
Dequan Johnson.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 how I can be that much more a part of a movement,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 see you protesting and that鈥檚 fine, but are you going to vote? We need that.鈥

Protests over the summer after the killing of George Floyd brought thousands into the North Texas streets, many who are new to civic action. But it鈥檚 unclear how much of that energy will show up during .

Johnson and Avitia are part of the group Enough is Enough Fort Worth. Co-founder Kwame Osei Jr. said they鈥檝e broadened beyond the protests in order to turn people out.

鈥淎s we were going to protests, we started going to more City Hall meetings and meeting with the chief of police and meeting with [Fort Worth] Mayor Betsy Price,鈥 Osei Jr. said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 where we started to shift the focus to a more community base. Because if we don鈥檛 change anything in legislation, then nothing鈥檚 going to happen.鈥

'Grassroots Is The Way To Go'

Organizations want to reform how cities, states and the federal government spend tax dollars and govern policing. That takes influencing elected officials or electing new ones.

Many of the summer鈥檚 protesters were teenagers, though, taking civic action for the first time. The voting habit doesn鈥檛 happen automatically.

Democrat Jasmine Crockett, who won her July primary runoff for Texas State House by , said political candidates have to 鈥渄o our part.鈥

Crockett said her campaign registered hundreds of people it met at Dallas protests. Her district is and she has no opponent in the general election.

Jasmine Crockett
Bret Jaspers
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四虎影院
Jasmine Crockett (D-Dallas) won her primary runoff for Texas State House District 100.

鈥淕rassroots is the way to go, no matter what, especially when you鈥檙e talking about the younger voter or the voter who鈥檚 normally disengaged,鈥 she said. 鈥淔or them, they鈥檙e looking at it and they鈥檙e saying, I see [the] president, but I don鈥檛 see the rest of you. And so you鈥檝e got to make it to them, some way, somehow.鈥

That could take dropping off fliers at a voter鈥檚 doorstep, something Crockett considers a key tactic. Ultimately, it鈥檚 the relationship a candidate forms with a potential voter that turns them out, she said. And since people don鈥檛 necessarily know what a state representative does, or what role that person plays in setting policy, Crockett said candidates have to inform them.

'Protest To Power Building'

Daniel Rentie said people are still learning about how local government works. He works in Frisco First Baptist Church鈥檚 college ministry and volunteered to help organize a protest in the city on June 1. turned out.

Now, Rentie is thinking about how to keep the momentum going and helping with a .

鈥淚 haven鈥檛 been the most involved on the state level, you know what I mean? It gets often neglected,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 where it鈥檚 shifting my attention too, is how we can 鈥 locally 鈥 get more involved.鈥

One group that鈥檚 been organizing on the ground for years is the Texas Organizing Project, or TOP. Deputy Director Brianna Brown said her staff and volunteers tried to have meaningful, yet socially-distant conversations with protesters this summer.

Brown鈥檚 group made about 1,200 new contacts across the state during the recent protests, about a third of which were in Dallas. Of that third, 80 attended a follow-up virtual meeting. TOP鈥檚 work with these new Dallas activists is centered around policy issues, like the city鈥檚 police budget.

Converting those people into voters, however, is not their number one priority.

鈥淢ore critical for us is, how do we figure out real and meaningful ways for people to be engaged beyond the election?鈥 she said.

Separately, the group plans to contact over 1.5 million voters this fall, mostly people of color.

鈥淧rotest to power building is what organizing [is] all about,鈥 Brown said.

And while voter registration is sharply down this year due to the pandemic, there is evidence protests have increased voter turnout in the past among some voters.

鈥淔or example, although Black voters cast ballots in lower numbers in the 2016 general election than they had in 2012, the drop off was less pronounced in areas where Black Lives Matter was active,鈥 University of Pennsylvania professor Daniel Q. Gillion wrote in a recent piece in . 鈥淎nd in areas that witnessed heightened levels of protest activity, Black voter turnout increased.鈥

The Enough is Enough Fort Worth activists are not leaving that to chance. They plan to visit busy locations in areas of Fort Worth a couple of times a week until the Oct. 5 voter registration deadline. Their focus is on neighborhoods with high numbers of low income people and people of color.

And though interactions with potential voters at the El Rancho that day were fleeting, Osei Jr. said deep conversations do happen.

When he meets a person who says his or her vote doesn鈥檛 matter, Osei Jr. said he calls on an analogy.

鈥淚 say, say 鈥 you have a sibling. And that sibling is putting 5 cents a day in their piggy bank. And you鈥檙e not putting nothing into your piggy bank. Who鈥檚 going to have more money?鈥

He means saving money over time is like consistent voting, where you build up political influence. It鈥檚 by voting, he said, activists can get closer to results they want.

Bret Jaspers is a reporter for 四虎影院. His stories have aired nationally on the BBC, NPR鈥檚 newsmagazines, and APM鈥檚 Marketplace. He collaborated on the series Cash Flows, which won a 2020 Sigma Delta Chi award for Radio Investigative Reporting. He's a member of Actors' Equity, the professional stage actors union.